- Dec 2, 2014
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I meant that their teachings led to that, not that they believed in Humanism.My story is similar. I was studying to be a layreader in a very liberal Anglican parish when I encountered conflicting traditions between so-called "traditional churches" as well as traditions that seemed to be in conflict the scriptures. At the time I thought I could find the "correct" tradition with research, reading the fathers, etc. I attended a Roman church for a while but the Marian and Papal dogmas really freaked me out. I never swam the Tiber. Thankfully a local Eastern Orthodox church was in the area and they set me on the right path, sorta. I would attend liturgy on Sunday's and most people would just ignore me, that's fine. It was a Greek parish so it was made clear I could attend but never really "fit in." The one thing they did was direct me to read scripture, read a good translation of scripture and stay with it. So I did, and you know what, the earliest record of the church is found in scripture. If you want to know what the Apostles taught, what was believed, how the early Christians practiced their faith look to the scriptures.
This is just unsubstantiated nonsense. Let's not forget Humanism, which lead to the period known as the Enlightenment, was birthed in and around Rome. The Enlightenment spurred on the idea that people are completely autonomous from God making each man his own "pope." This is not what the Reformers taught or believed. Sure, you could find elements in the Radical Reformers (Anabaptists, Mennonites, etc) but not in the mainline Reformers like Luther, Zwingli or Calvin.
Yours in the Lord,
jm
PS: A good way to get a birds eye view of church history is by listening to Communio Sanctorum.
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